What the New Possession Grounds from May 2026 Mean for Landlords

Regaining possession takes a new turn after May 2026, when private landlords in England will no longer be able to rely on a simple no-fault notice. Instead, every attempt to end a tenancy must be based on at least one of the new legal possession grounds set out under the Renters’ Rights Act. The government has issued updated guidance to help landlords and agents in the Private Rented Sector understand how this new framework will work in day-to-day situations.

Under this system, you start by matching your circumstances to the most appropriate ground, or combination of grounds, and then serve notice using the correct notice period for those grounds. If the tenant is still in the property when that notice runs out, you can move straight to a court claim for possession. 

However strong your case might be, one condition always applies: the court will not grant a possession order unless the tenant’s deposit has been correctly protected in a government-approved tenancy deposit scheme.

The law separates possession grounds into mandatory and discretionary. For mandatory grounds, if the facts are made out, the court is required to give possession. For discretionary grounds, the court will look beyond the bare facts and decide whether, overall, it is fair and reasonable to grant possession.

Mandatory grounds

Ground 1

You can use this ground where you, or a close family member, need to move into the property, but not during the first 12 months of the tenancy, and you can only take up occupation once possession has been granted. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 1A 

If you have a genuine intention to sell the property, you can seek possession, but not within the first 12 months of a new tenancy; social landlords/PRPs cannot rely on this ground until 2027. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 1B 

This ground is restricted to Rent to Buy properties and can be used where the tenant is offered the option to purchase at the end of the scheme but does not take it up. Social landlords and PRPs will not be able to use this ground until 2027. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 2

If a lender needs to take back the property to sell it because mortgage payments have fallen into arrears, they can apply for possession, and the tenant will be required to leave on the date ordered by the court. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 2ZA

Where you sublet under a superior lease that is due to end within 12 months, you can only rely on this ground if you are an agricultural landlord, a supported accommodation provider, or a company that is at least 50% council-owned. Social landlords cannot use this ground until 2027. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 2ZB 

Where you sublet under a superior lease that was for a fixed term of more than 21 years, and that lease is ending, has ended, or will not be extended within 12 months, you can seek possession on this ground. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 2ZC 

Once a superior lease has come to an end, the landlord under that lease can effectively step into your shoes as your tenant’s landlord and apply to the court for possession. This is only possible where the original letting to the tenant was an assured tenancy and you were an agricultural landlord, a supported accommodation provider, a company that is at least 50% council-owned, or a PRP. The notice must be served by the superior landlord, and where the original landlord was a social landlord, this ground cannot be used until 2027. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 2ZD

Where the superior lease was granted for a fixed term of more than 21 years and has come to an end, the superior landlord can apply for possession, but must issue court proceedings within six months of the lease reverting to them.  Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 4 

This ground can only be used by universities and colleges for student accommodation, and only where the property has been let to students at some point in the 12 months before the tenancy began. Notice to be given: 2 weeks

Ground 4A

If your property is a student HMO and you need it for a new group of full-time students for the next academic year (between 1 June and 30 September), you can use this ground to seek possession. This is only available where the tenancy was not agreed more than six months before it started, and the tenant was warned that you might rely on this ground.  Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 5 

If the property is mainly used to house a minister of religion and is required for that purpose again, you can seek possession under this ground. Notice to be given: 2 months

Ground 5A

If you require the property to accommodate an employed or self-employed agricultural worker, you can seek possession using this ground.  Notice to be given: 2 months

Ground 5B

Where the property was let to a tenant because they met specific employment requirements (for example, key worker criteria) and they no longer meet those requirements, you can seek possession so the home can be let to someone who does; social landlords/PRPs cannot rely on this ground until 2027. Notice to be given: 2 months

Ground 5C 

If the tenant was housed because they were employed by you, you can seek possession if their employment ends; this also applies where the tenancy was not intended to last for the full length of employment and the property is needed for a new employee, and where the home is let to police constables who are not classed as employees. Notice to be given: 2 months

Ground 5D

Where a social landlord or PRP has let a property based on specific employment criteria and the tenant no longer meets those requirements, possession can be sought under this ground, but only from 2027, when the new rules are extended to the social rented sector. Notice to be given: 2 months

Ground 5E 

If the property is generally used as supported accommodation and is required for that use again, you can rely on this ground to seek possession, but not where the existing tenant still needs that particular property as supported accommodation. Notice to be given: 4 weeks

Ground 5F 

If you rented out your property as supported accommodation, you can seek possession on this ground where the support has stopped, or funding has ended, or the accommodation is no longer suitable because the tenant’s support needs have changed. Notice to be given: 4 weeks

Ground 5G 

If the property was used as temporary accommodation for statutory homelessness duty and the council has told you it is no longer needed, you can seek possession, but you must start the process within 12 months of being notified; social landlords/PRPs cannot rely on this ground until 2027. Notice to be given: 4 weeks

Ground 5H

If the tenancy was granted as stepping-stone accommodation with lower rent and eligibility criteria (such as being within a certain age range and/or in work or actively seeking work), you can seek possession if the tenant no longer meets the criteria or if the agreed stepping-stone period has ended; social landlords/PRPs cannot rely on this ground until 2027. Notice to be given: 2 months

Ground 6

If you need to redevelop or demolish the property and the tenant cannot live there while the work is carried out, you can seek possession on this ground, though it is usually not available in the first six months of a tenancy; social landlords may need to provide suitable alternative accommodation unless the tenant was warned before the tenancy began, and social landlords/PRPs cannot rely on this ground until 2027. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 6A

If you are a social landlord and your tenant has been living in decant accommodation because their original home was or is being redeveloped, you can seek possession on this ground from 2027, as long as suitable alternative accommodation is available for them. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 6B

If a court requires you to take back the property following enforcement action for a legal breach, you can seek possession and may be ordered to pay compensation. Notice to be given: 4 months

Ground 7 

If a person inherits the tenancy but was not living in the property immediately before the tenant’s death, you can seek possession, typically within 12 months of the date of death. Social landlords and PRPs will not be able to rely on this ground until 2027.  Notice to be given: 2 months

Ground 7A

 If the tenant, household member, or visitor is convicted of serious crime, breaches an antisocial behaviour order, or a closure order blocks access for 48+ hours, you can apply immediately, but any possession order cannot take effect until 14 days after notice is served. Notice to be given: none

Ground 7B 

If the Secretary of State notifies you that your tenant has no Right to Rent under immigration law, you can seek possession on this ground. Notice to be given: 2 weeks

Ground 8 

If your tenant owes at least 3 months’ rent (monthly) or 13 weeks’ rent (weekly or fortnightly) on both the notice date and the hearing date, you can seek possession under this mandatory ground; it will fail if arrears drop below that level by the hearing, and arrears caused solely by delayed Universal Credit do not count. Notice to be given: 4 weeks

Discretionary grounds

Ground 9

If your tenant has been offered suitable alternative accommodation, you can seek possession on this ground, but the court will decide whether eviction is reasonable. Notice to be given: 2 months

Ground 10

If your tenant has fallen into rent arrears, you can apply for possession before the debt reaches 3 months’ rent, but the court will only make a possession order if it decides that eviction is reasonable in the circumstances. Notice to be given: 4 weeks

Ground 11

If your tenant has repeatedly delayed paying rent, you can try to evict them, but you must give notice before applying to court. Notice to be given: 4 weeks

Ground 12

If your tenant has breached one or more terms of the tenancy that do not relate to rent, you can seek to evict them, but you must serve notice before making a court application. Notice to be given: 2 weeks

Ground 13

If your tenant has allowed the condition of the property to get worse, you can try to evict them, but you must give notice before applying to court. Notice to be given: 2 weeks

Ground 14

If your tenant, someone living with them, or a visitor commits antisocial behaviour, or commits a serious offence in or near the property, you can apply to the court straight away, but the court cannot make a possession order until 14 days after notice is served. Notice to be given: none

Ground 14A

If your tenant has carried out domestic abuse, you can try to evict them, but only where their partner or someone living with them has left and is unlikely to return; social landlords/PRPs cannot rely on this ground until 2027. Notice to be given: 2 weeks

Ground 14ZA

If your tenant, or any other adult living in the property, is convicted of an offence linked to a riot, you can seek to evict them, but you must serve notice before making a court application.  Notice to be given: 2 weeks

Ground 15

If your tenant has allowed the condition of the furniture to get worse, you can try to evict them, but you must give notice before applying to court. Notice to be given: 2 weeks

Ground 17

If your tenant, or someone acting on their behalf, gave false information to get the property, you can try to evict them, but you must give notice before applying to court. Notice to be given: 2 weeks

Ground 18 

If your tenant is in supported accommodation and does not engage with the support, you can try to evict them, but you must give notice before applying to court. Notice to be given: 4 weeks

Struggling to Make Sense of the New Grounds?

The post–May 2026 rules expect landlords to link every possession claim to a clear legal ground and the right notice period. For many landlords, that’s a big adjustment from the old “no-fault” system, and it can be hard to feel confident that you have chosen the right route.

Hunters can help you cut through the complexity. Your local lettings team can look at your situation in detail, explain how the new possession grounds work in practice, and highlight which ground or combination of grounds is likely to apply. We can also go through your notice and paperwork so that, if you do need to go to court, your case is properly prepared from the outset.

If you would like to understand the bigger picture first, our guide to what the Renters’ Rights Act means for self-managing landlords is a great place to start. Your nearest Hunters branch can then provide advice shaped around your specific properties, tenants and long-term plans for your portfolio.

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